I've used React Native for a client and, whilst it was super clunky, I still enjoyed being able to write React to deploy to mobile. With React Native for Web, you can technical write code that writes to a bunch of different platforms, a big selling point for businesses.
Check out Ionic which now fully supports React and will give you a similar benefit but without the need to use RNW or have different code for each platform. Also Ionic’s components are much more robust and widely used than RNW.
I agree that Ionic's components are easier to work with and less of a hassle. However, React Native components let you talk directly to native, even using native components from the native platform's ecosystem in your code. It's a tradeoff developers have to make.
That’s fair! One other option is to do both: use Capacitor and embed it inside native navigation controls (i.e. a native shell), then use Ionic React for screens, etc.
One other aspect is that Ionic React uses react-dom so it will be a pretty normal react dev experience compared to RN which isn’t 1-1 (CSS being an example).
Also, what's up with so many websites being built in a way that makes "open in new tab"/middle click impossible?
This problem is exacerbated by the fact that clicking "back", either in the browser or in the webpage, doesn't remember your position in the previous page.
Is this due to whatever javascript UI framework was used?
People with limited mouse dexterity. People who hate mice. If you don't browse with the keyboard you don't see the focus state move anyway, so leave it on for people who need it.
I agree with both of you actually, app is great but I don't don't like Material when I see it usually unless it's skinned well enough to not instantly tell it's Material. Something about that default theme...
I have a hard time seeing how "gross" could describe the look of Material UI. Uninspired or unnatractive maybe, but gross?
Also, it's dead-easy to customise - there are a bunch of facilities for doing so, from global to component level, with CSS-in-JS or CSS class overrides. You can make it unrecognizable without that much work.
Anti-vaccination isn't exclusively an American phenomenon. It just seems like it because most commenters would be Americans or foreigners who live in bubbles. I remember in high school in Australia about a decade ago, there was one kid who was said innoculations were akin to "injecting garbage into your bloodstream".
I also frequently give blood in Australia and there are also more and more warnings about measles and stuff (interestingly regarding neighbourhoods that tend to vote very progressive).
I'm super loyal to the Microsoft Basic mouse. It lasts forever whereas all the Logitech M100's that I've purchased (and I've purchased a lot of them) don't last more than 6 months. Sad!
+1, had a Microsoft Mouse 5000 for the last ~5 years. Good for larger hands, love the smooth scrolling having got used to it. Needs the odd teardown to remove fluff from the optical wheel sensor, I can live with that fine :)
I use both Office for Mac and Windows all the time and Office for Mac is pretty reliable IMO. They pretty much have feature parity. Which features are you missing?
Have you tried using PowerQuery for instance? It's only one of the things available in Windows only. Same if you try to work with the Data Model. (I'm not sure for Macros & VBAs but can guess they are also mostly not functional)
Again, not very common for the 99%, but if you are an Excel power user you should know about those, especially about PQ.
I believe that is a good thing. I used to work at Microsoft and many of their own employees hate Access and wish Microsoft would have replaced it with Foxpro when they bought that back in the 90s.
I don't disagree with the important question of "Where does the money come from?" (Perhaps, it's also, "What didn't we fund because of this?") But FWIW, America is not unique in its serious debt situation and as a percentage of GDP, it's not unusual. Many EU nations are in the trillions of debt ballpark. Also China, Canada, Australia, etc. In fact, some of those nations exceed America in national debt per capita. [1]
I write this as a Canadian. We're also a nation of serious debt and I sometimes wonder where money for my government's big projects comes from...
From the link it seems that all major economic powers have a large "external debt". Then who are the creditors? If every country paid their debt, where would the money end up?
And I see from the article that "... while a country may have a relatively large external debt (either in absolute or per capita terms) it could actually be a "net international creditor" .
Wouldn't it be better to focus on this "balance of debts vs. assets?"
The best analogy I think is that we borrow the money from our future selves. If we invest it well then our future selves will enjoy the wealth in retirement. If we fritter it, we will be destitute in our old age.
Accountants and economists will think in terms like cash flow, net present value, opportunity cost, etc. In that way of thinking rationally you want as much debt as you can carry. State actors with control of money supply are even less worried about solvency.
I agree with your point. There should be some skepticism that debt discourages, rather than encourages war. In more militaristic or authoritarian nations, if the debt were great enough, it could be an incentive to invade the neighbor/nearby country you owe it to in order to destroy it (assuming that scenario).
One of the several reasons Iraq invaded Kuwait, is that Kuwait refused to forgive $14 billion in loans (to Iraq) accrued during the Iran-Iraq war. Iraq's annual GDP in the 1980s was $40b to $60b depending on the year, to give you some idea of their ability to deal with the $14b in debt held by Kuwait (it was a considerable sum to them in the 1980s; it might be like the US owing Panama or Singapore $5 trillion today).
Another point of context, the US spent $2.4T on the Iraq+Afghanistan wars.
Invading Kuwait over $14B debt is a strange leap, since Iraq could far less expensively simply default. Anyway, it's the wrong direction -- $14B debt to Kuwait would make Kuwait less interested in invading Iraq for risk of forcing default. But either way, the value of the oil spoils (in either direction) dwarfs the cost of the debt.
Because generally, the rich are the ones who miss out in the former, while the poor miss out on the latter. Someone whose house gets destroyed will lose out a lot more from that, then from some small fraction of their pension fund going belly up because the belligerent nation has stopped making bond payments.
Since wars tend to be started by the rich (and their proxies), and fought by the poor, this puts skin in their game.
At least, that's the reasoning. I don't really agree with it.
External debt is not the same as national debt and does not in it self say very much about the health of the public sector economy, since it includes private debt including accounts held in the country by foreigners for business reasons, tax evasion etc.
Debt is irrelevant when you can literally print money out of thin air. There are many creative ways of doing so, particularly when you're a global superpower
Not sure why this is being downvoted. You are correct. I suspect the downvotes are because people don't read carefully and assume you are endorsing it, despite the fact that nowhere did you say it was good or ok, simply that they can.
There have already been indications that the US intends to print their way out of debt. We have already printed billions over the past few years. If you look at graphs and charts of inflation, it's breathtaking.
Your last paragraph is very misleading. While it's true that the US has printed billions of dollars in the last few years, that is not all that significant when you consider that we have trillions in circulation. Also, our inflation rate is far from breathtaking, and has been consistently hovering around 2% a year for decades (https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/T10YIE)
I'm not generally a "don't trust the government numbers" kind of person, but in the case of inflation their numbers are wrong. They don't capture true cost of living changes and the reduction in purchasing power.
The Bloomberg article you linked in reply to another comment about the mis-measurement of CPI was very interesting, but even the alternative measurements discussed in that article estimated inflation to be below 3%.
The Investopedia article discusses how the Fed will reduce their balance sheet, which is actually more or less the opposite of printing money. During the Great Recession, the Fed bought a lot of financial assets (i.e other people's debt) in order to restore faith in the economy and prevent a complete meltdown. Now, they have to decide whether to sell these assets or hold them to their maturity. Regardless of what they choose, they will be receiving cash either in the form of the sale price or dividends.
The Federal Reserve has a mandate to keep inflation rates low, and they generally do a very good job at that. That doesn't mean we shouldn't worry about our national debt, but I wouldn't be too worried about hyperinflation now or in the near future.
> If you look at graphs and charts of inflation, it's breathtaking.
I don't see what you're seeing. Inflation has been close to (the Fed's target of) 2% for the last 10 years. That's much lower than its historical values. So if anything the US has chosen less inflation in recent times.
If the 2% is accurate (which I don't believe it to be. There's no shortage of people much more educated and informed than I that are talking about this), then it's certainly not "breathtaking" as I said. I had in mind a graph (which I inconveniently cannot find now) that showed inflation over the last 100 years prior to the US coming off the gold standard. There was basically none, but it has since sky rocketed.
> inflation over the last 100 years prior to the US coming off the gold standard. There was basically none, but it has since sky rocketed.
Sure, but I don't think that the high inflation between 1934 and 1976 can be used to judge the current system with an independent central bank and an explicit 2% inflation target.
The proposed measure merely claims to be faster to respond to changes in prices. Note how the new measure is lower than CPI during the crisis, but higher elsewhere. In the long term they should be the same. So I don't think that this suggests that inflation is being systematically underestimated.
There's no debate about the obvious fact that intentionally inflationary currency has less inflation than intentionally deflationary currency. The debate is whether the inflationary currency generates more economic growth than deflationary currency (by stimulating productivity in otherwise idle labor/capital), and most economic policymakers believe it does.
While you can certainly keep increasing the monetary supply, I wouldn't say debt is irrelevant - the costs of servicing that debt will start getting high for the US. Debasing your currency is one way to erode that debt but it will come with its own problems
No, you can't, if you care about future generations. Printing money is literally stealing from the least priviliged and their already vanishing savings.
A few billion is literally nothing compared to our overall balance sheet. If you’re worried about American debt, you need to look at the pentagon and social security, not our research efforts.
When people talk about US debt, they're not talking about something like your credit card bill. When the US needs to take on debt, they do it by issuing Treasury bonds.
These bonds are a contract saying that in exchange for your money today, the US government will pay you a fixed interest rate every month until the bond expires. In order to raise the money to pay off these fixed interest rates, the US government can either tax its citizens or issue more bonds.
For the past hundreds of years, our government has fulfilled its contracts and paid off the interest on all of its bonds. If we ever neglected to do so (AKA defaulted), it would be MUCH harder for our country to raise money in the future. Also, much of our government's debt is owned by American citizens, so we would be shooting ourselves in the foot, hurting domestic investors, and possibly causing a global economic crash.
That's what's making us pay, not some loan shark knocking on the White House door
In addition to the points you make above, having the world’s most trusted debt also helps to make the US dollar the world’s most stable currency, thus affording the US enormous influence in global fiscal policy. If contracts around the world started getting settled largely in Euros or Yuan, the US would find itself in a much less powerful position at the global negotiating table. As with most things in life, those who control the money have the power.
Well, obviously the US is not going to tell its creditors to go screw themselves. They'll just re-structure the debt in a less favorable for the creditor way. And the latter will agree to that because it has no better options.
That will still tank the economy.. creditors no longer have liquid funds and trust is gone. Any future bond issues will have very interest rates, while the debt now is not actually very large compared to gdp in the U.S and is quite serviceable, if the interest rates become high it will become difficult to service it causing runaway effects and future investments/spending will be hampered leading to all sorts of problems